(Source: Brill|Nijhoff)
Brill has just published the e-book of “Understanding
the Sources of Early Modern and Modern Commercial Law” in its Studies in the
History of Private Law series. The hardback is due to be published later this
month.
ABOUT
The contributions of Understanding the
Sources of Early Modern and Modern Commercial Law: Courts, Statutes, Contracts,
and Legal Scholarship show the wealth of sources which historians of commercial
law use to approach their subject. Depending on the subject, historical
research on mercantile law must be ready to open up to different approaches and
sources in a truly imaginative and interdisciplinary way. This, more than many
other branches of law, has always been largely non-state law. Normative,
‘official’, sources are important in commercial law as well, but other sources
are often needed to complement them. The articles of the volume present an
excellent assemblage of those sources. Anja Amend-Traut, Albrecht Cordes, Serge
Dauchy, Dave De ruysscher, Olivier Descamps, Ricardo Galliano Court, Eberhard
Isenmann, Mia Korpiola, Peter Oestmann, Heikki Pihlajamäki, Edouard Richard,
Margrit Schulte Beerbühl, Guido Rossi, Bram Van Hofstraeten, Boudewijn Sirks,
Alain Wijffels, and Justyna Wubs-Mrozewicz.
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
List of
Illustrations
Notes on
Contributors
1 Introduction Heikki Pihlajamäki, Albrecht Cordes,
Serge Dauchy and Dave De ruysscher
2 Mercantile
Conflict Resolution in Practice: Connecting Legal and Diplomatic Sources from
Danzig c. 1460–1580 Justyna Wubs-Mrozewicz
3 Justitia in Commerciis: Public Governance and Commercial Litigation
before the Great Council of Mechlin in the Late Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth
Century Alain Wijffels
4 Honore et utile: The Approaches and Practice of
Sixteenth-century Genoese Merchant Custom Ricardo
Galliano Court
5 The Abandonment to the Insurers in Sixteenth-century Insurance Practice:
Comparative Remarks and (A Few) Methodological Notes Guido
Rossi
6 Historiographical Opportunities of Notarized Partnership Agreements
Recorded in the Early Modern Low Countries Bram Van Hofstraeten
7 How Normative were Merchant Guidebooks? Of Customs, Practices, and … Good
Advice (Antwerp, Sixteenth Century) Dave De ruysscher
8 Sources of Commercial Law in the Dutch Republic and Kingdom Boudewijn
Sirks
9 The Files and Exhibits of the Imperial Chamber Court and Aulic Council as
Sources of Commercial Law Anja Amend-Traut
10 Legal, Moral-Theological, and Genuinely Economic Opinions on Questions of
Trade and Economy in Fifteenth- and Early Sixteenth-century Germany Eberhard
Isenmann
11 The Birth of Commercial Law in Early Modern Sweden: Sources and
Historiography Heikki Pihlajamäki
12 Svea Court of Appeal Records as a Source of Commercial Law: The Founding
Year of 1614 Mia Korpiola
13 Tracing the Speculation Bubble of 1799 in Newspapers, Court Records, and
Other Sources Margrit Schulte Beerbühl
14 The Rise of Usages in French Commercial Law and Jurisprudence (Seventeenth-Nineteenth
Centuries): Some Examples Edouard Richard
15 On the Origins of the French Commercial Code: Vicissitudes of the Gorneau
Draft Olivier Descamps
16 Court Records as Sources for the History of Commercial Law:
The Oberappellationsgericht Lübeck as a Commercial Court (1820–1879) Peter
Oestmann
Index of
Names
Index of
Places
Index of
Subjects
READERSHIP
All interested in the history of commercial
law, legal history, economic history, and history of the early modern period.
For more information, please visit the publisher’s website
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